Concept cluster: Tasks > Property tenure
n
(property law, England & Wales) Synonym of full agricultural tenancy.
n
Synonym of anchor tenant
n
Used other than figuratively or idiomatically: see apartment, let.
n
(law, UK, obsolete) A letting or renting, especially a licence to enclose land in a forest with a low hedge and ditch, under a yearly rent.
n
(law) The amount of rent assessed before inclusion of additional expenses or other factors that increase the amount of rent to be paid.
v
(UK, idiomatic) To purchase a property as in investment, and to let it out for rental instead of living in it
adj
(UK) Describing, or relating to a property bought as an investment, the purchaser letting it to others rather than living in it
adj
Leased or hired.
n
(Britain) An annual charge on certain freehold properties in England.
n
A joint lessee; a partner in a lease.
n
A partner in giving a lease.
n
(law) The breach of a landlord/tenant relationship that occurs when the landlord does not order the tenant to leave the property, but allows the property occupied by the tenant to fall into such poor condition that it can no longer be lived in.
n
(property law) A person who shares a tenancy with another; a co-owner of an interest in property.
n
A lease of crown land (land belonging to the government when the head of state is a monarch).
n
(law) Synonym of fee simple subject to executory interest
n
(property law, England & Wales) An agricultural tenancy agreed before 1 September 1995, to which the Agricultural Holdings Act 1986 applies.
n
(law, Pennsylvania, Maryland) Rentcharge.
n
(law) Synonym of adverse possession
n
(law, Scotland) An extended lease to induce the tenant to make improvements to the premises.
n
(law) One of the owners of an asset that is mutually owned by joint tenancy.
n
A person that leases real property; a lessor.
n
(UK, real estate) The tenant nominated to be the primary point of contact for a managed residential joint tenancy.
n
The period of such an interest.
n
(law, England & Wales, historical) A kind of lease for a term of years determinable, popular in the 17th and 18th centuries, which typically named three individuals – the "lives" – and determined upon the death of all three.
n
The limit of the tenant space, either physically demarcated (by a demising partition or demising wall) or imaginary, controlled by the tenant of a leased, typically retail space, in a multi-tenant establishment, such as a mall.
n
The characteristic of being leaseable; the ability to be rented for a set term in order to yield profit.
n
(finance) A property transaction where a party sells something, then leases it from the purchaser. The seller is released from tax, depreciation, and maintenance costs, and the buyer is guaranteed an income from the property.https://web.archive.org/web/20070827183530/http://www.bartleby.com/61/15/L0091500.html
n
A person who is tenant by holding a lease; a lessee.
n
The holding of a lease.
n
(archaic) One who leases property at extortionate rates.
n
(nonstandard) One who leases or gleans; lessor.
v
Alternative form of lease (to glean, or pick up grain) [(transitive, formal, law) To grant a lease as a landlord; to let.]
n
The entity to whom a lease is given, or who takes an estate by lease.
n
The allowing of possession of a property etc. in exchange for rent.
n
Alternative form of letter (“one who lets a property”)
n
(law) The recipient of a life estate.
n
(dated) A lifetime appointment, a condition that exists or service that is provided for the duration of a person's lifetime or for the remainder of a person's life.
n
(law) A leasing on rent.
n
(business) An agreement that requires the tenant to pay, in addition to the fixed rent, all of the property expenses which normally would be paid by the owner. For US real property these include real estate taxes, insurance, maintenance, repairs and utilities.
n
Synonym of property tax
n
Alternative form of quitrent [A rent reserved in grants of land, by the payment of which the tenant is quit (absolved) from other service.]
n
A rent reserved in grants of land, by the payment of which the tenant is quit (absolved) from other service.
n
Alternative form of rack rents; plural of rack-rent.
n
Alternative form of releasee [A party that is given a release]
n
Alternative form of releasor [(law) A person who releases (surrenders) a claim on an estate]
n
(economics) A profit from possession of a valuable right, as a restricted license to engage in a trade or business.
n
A list of lands, properties etc. owned by a person with the rents due on them; hence, the income generated for a person by the rent owed to them.
adj
Subject to rent control.
n
A transaction by which tangible property, such as furniture or electronics, is leased in exchange for a weekly or monthly payment, with the option to purchase at some point during the agreement.
n
An act of renting.
n
(property law) An annual sum or periodic payment charged on certain freehold properties or payable out of the income of those properties and expressly giving to the rentcharger, who has no reversionary interest in the property, the right of distress for arrears.
n
The person or organisation on which a rentcharge is levied.
n
(rare) One who rents (property, etc.) from somebody.
n
One who rents property or other goods from another.
n
An individual who receives an income, usually interest, rent, dividends, capital gains, or profits from his or her assets and investments.
n
(rare) A person who rents a property to a rentee
n
leaseback
n
Alternative form of se-tenant [(philately) A set of postage stamps with differing values, colours, etc, but printed on the same sheet.]
adj
(UK, law) Describing a tenancy that exists for an agreed term, at the end of which the property may be recovered by the landlord.
n
(UK) A tenant who is already in occupation of a premises, especially when there is a change of owner. The tenant is not evicted when the property is sold to a new owner.
n
A legal grant for a subdivision of a patent or giving less than complete ownership rights.
v
(transitive) To rent to a third person something that one is renting from another.
n
(law, Scotland and Northern England) A contract by which the use of a thing is set, or let, for hire; a lease.
n
Synonym of lease (an interest in land, its related contract or the document containing that contract); more commonly used when a lease is short-term or has a periodic rent that is not merely nominal.
n
(law) A type of concurrent estate available only to married couples, where ownership of property is treated as though the couple were a single legal person.
n
A life estate.
n
One who holds a lease (a tenancy).
n
(law) The right to compensation which a tenant has, either by custom or by law, against the landlord for improvements at the termination of the tenancy.
n
The body of tenants on an estate.
n
(law) Any form of property that is held by one person from another, rather than being owned.
n
(obsolete) A tenet.
n
(law, idiomatic) The lease under which that estate in land is held.
n
(law) The owner of land acquired from a judgment debtor.
n
Any similar arrangement for other types of equipment.
n
(aviation) The leasing of an airplane including crew, maintenance and insurance to another organisation, usually for a short period of time.

Note: Concept clusters like the one above are an experimental OneLook feature. We've grouped words and phrases into thousands of clusters based on a statistical analysis of how they are used in writing. Some of the words and concepts may be vulgar or offensive. The names of the clusters were written automatically and may not precisely describe every word within the cluster; furthermore, the clusters may be missing some entries that you'd normally associate with their names. Click on a word to look it up on OneLook.
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